Previously, this would not work properly and not be let through the
sanity check.
This is a dirty hack until the next iteration where I'll clean up the
data structures and make this saner.
If you look at GNU coreutils, they do not support the mappings
$ echo "1234abc" | tr "[:alnum:]" "[:upper:]"
$ echo "ABCabc" | tr -c "[:upper:]" "[l*]"
to only give a few examples. This commit broadens the scope of tr(1)
as far as humanly possible to map between classes and non-classes,
making tr a usable tool and actually fulfilling user expectations.
Posix really is of no help here as it still kind of assumes the
fixed ASCII table instead of complex Unicode code points or even
Grapheme clusters.
Okay, it took me a while and another look at the Posix spec to see that
I have been dealing with squeezing in a way too complicated way.
What just needed to be done is before doing the final write to deploy
the squeeze-check. We actually do not need this atomically complicated
squeeze check in every single edge-case. Now it should work properly.
Given:
static int marks['z' - 'a'];
marks[c];
In this case c is the character read and index is out of bounds. We
need marks[c - 'a']
While playing around with optimization settings gcc caught caught this.
Also fix one check for c, change from isalpha to islower.
-emg
From 2cc36818283e9068576c1042690c016a81b709a3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Evan Gates <evan.gates@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2016 09:52:39 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] fix marks indexing
This allows users to touch files they have write access to, but aren't the
owner.
Also, remove utime.h include (not necessary since
4132561c17), and make sure to check the return
value of localtime (potentially preventing a NULL pointer derefence).
Currently, if the caller has a umask of 002 or 000, the file gets created as 644
anyway.
Also, add O_WRONLY to the open call, since POSIX says that "Applications shall
specify exactly one of the first five values (file access modes) below in the
value of oflag".
This is required in order for autoconf's AC_PROG_INSTALL to use the sbase
install. Otherwise it will fall back to the slow and sucky install-sh script
from automake.
Currently, if you specify -t x, then s is advanced once in the switch statement
to determine the length, and then once again in the for loop, resulting in a
read past the end of the argument.
Also, use sizeof(int) when no length is specified, as specified by POSIX.
I'm not sure if there are other implications of this or not, but
the issue is that columns() uses len to store the allocated buffer
size, but linecmp() compares up to len bytes. If those trailing
bytes do not match, the line is considered not matching, even though
the relevant parts of the buffer do match.
To resolve this, also keep track of column capacity. Additionally,
since there is no reason to keep the existing data when resizing,
just use free and emalloc rather than erealloc.
The simplest case I could reduce it to is this:
if [ "$(printf '%s\n' a a xxb xxc | ./sort -u)" = "$(printf '%s\n' a xxb xxc)" ] ; then
echo pass
else
echo fail
fi
- After first iteration, set first to 0 instead of !first.
- If Hflag || Lflag, then mkent used stat instead of lstat, so the
entity cannot be a symlink.
- Print path prefix along with directory name.
- In the 'if (Rflag)' block, just use 1 instead of Rflag.
This reverts commit bb83eade39.
This commit causes the loop through dents at the end of main to
continue past the end of the dents array, causing a crash when
called with multiple directory arguments.
Previously, it printed lines that didn't match some pattern. Instead,
it should print lines that don't match *any* pattern.
Test case:
out=$(echo foo | ./grep -v -e foo -e bar)
if [ "$?" = 1 ] && [ -z "$out" ] ; then
echo pass
else
echo fail
fi
This provides a reliable and portable way to
test whether an environment variable is defined.
(Of course, if you are using glibc you may get
false positives if you include a = in the query.)
Signed-off-by: Mattias Andrée <maandree@kth.se>
reproduce: touch -t 12345678 mytralala
would only give a warning and use uninitialised time values. The proper
way is to treat it as an error. Clear the "struct tm" and kill some lines
just in case.
In eb9bda8787, a bug was introduced in the
handling of -1 return values from getline. Since the type of the len
field in struct line is unsigned, the break condition was never true.
This caused sort -c to never succeed.
A bug was introduced in the NUL support refactor leading to
the length of the previous line only being saved if the
previous line was shorter than the current line. If triggered
this lead to copying too much data into the previous line buffer.
Behavior before:
printf '1234\na\n' | ./uniq
1234
a
4
Behavior after:
printf '1234\na\n' | ./uniq
1234
a